<span>Low-income workers without adequate health insurance for cancer care are relying on charities to negotiate discounts or pay their treatment fees in full. </span> <span>Mandatory health insurance in Dubai covers cancer care </span><span>up to Dh150,000 per year, but not all cancers are covered by the health authority's optional </span><span>fund to top up cover.</span> <span>Charities, </span><span>such as the Cancer Patient Care Society – Rahma in Abu Dhabi, offer financial support to patients and some embassies have an emergency medical fund for its residents in the UAE.</span> <span>Dubai Health Authority's Basmah initiative mandates insurers to make an extra Dh18 annual payment into a fund that is then used to pay for cancer patients' care. But it </span><span>covers only three cancers – breast, colorectal and cervical – for low-income workers earning less than Dh4,000 a month. </span> <span>Lung cancer treatment is expected to be introduced within a year under the additional insurance plan. </span> <span>“Insurance cover for cancer is a work in progress, and developing all the time,” said Stephen Maclaren, a director at UAE health insurance brokers AES International.</span> <span>“There is a priority to diagnose cancer as early as possible, with greater availability of screening programmes to improve patient recovery. A cancer diagnosed early – in stage one or two – gives an increased chance of survival and the medical insurance industry, working with clients, needs to move more into preventive medicine.”</span> <span>According to the Department of Health Abu Dhabi, the </span><span>five most common cancers in males are leukaemia, colorectal, prostate, non-Hodgkins lymphoma and brain cancer.</span> <span>In women, breast cancer is the most common, followed by leukaemia, colorectal, thyroid and uterine cancer</span><span>.</span> <span>Lung cancer is the deadliest in men in the UAE, while women are more likely to die from breast cancer than any other.</span> <span>Colorectal cancer is the second deadliest form of cancer in both sexes, and is one of the three conditions covered by the Basmah scheme in Dubai.</span> <span>Patients who register for the Basmah initiative must go to a centre of excellence</span><span> – currently that is Latifa Hospital – for treatment and insurers must opt patients in at the start of a cancer diagnosis. Cancer patient support programmes are administered by TruDoc Healthcare on behalf of the DHA.</span> <span>"Currently, lung cancer and skin cancer are not covered under this policy," </span><span>Mr Maclaren said. "This initiative aims to top up that basic health insurance cover, but only for the three listed cancers.</span> <span>“Cancer treatment is often expensive and can incur considerable costs for insurers.”</span> <span>Once the insured limit of care costs is reached, patients often then return home to continue their care, Mr Maclaren said.</span> <span>Low-income workers are considered at high risk from some cancers, with those working outdoors in the UAE </span><span>more vulnerable to skin cancer</span><span> than others. Smokers are more likely to require treatment for lung cancer.</span> <span>Charities can step in to support patients unable to pay medical bills for cancer, which can run into hundreds of thousands of dirhams for surgery and long-term care.</span> <span>One such charity is the Cancer Patient Society – Rahma in Abu Dhabi.</span> <span>A committee of doctors assesses each patient case to decide on eligibility for financial support.</span> <span>A medical report is required to confirm a cancer diagnosis, while patients are means tested to assess their suitability for financial support up to Dh100,000.</span> <span>“We try to help as much as we can,” said Ghada Al Jneibi, Rahma’s deputy director.</span> <span>“Rahma can help with covering the cost of treatment, or seeking a reduced rate from hospitals in Abu Dhabi. “If someone is earning Dh20,000, for example, they can still get support if they can prove they have dependents and family costs.</span> <span>“If they are not eligible, we can negotiate discounts on care with our medical partners at all of the government hospitals and most in the private sector.” </span> <span>Screening for breast, cervical and colorectal cancer is now available on the mandatory health insurance package in Dubai, which all companies must offer.</span> <span>Private hospitals regularly undertake free screening programmes to improve early detection of cancer and boost survival rates.</span> <span>One of those success stories is the Zulekha Healthcare Group’s cervical cancer screening programme, Chance to Change.</span> <span>In 2014, 282 women attended a check-up at the Sharjah Zulekha Hospital. </span> <span>That number increased to 1,756 last year. </span> <span>Low-income workers from the Philippines can also access a hardship fund if they have inadequate health insurance.</span> <span>Paul Cortes, Consul General to Dubai and the Northern Emirates, said Filipinos can </span><span>apply for financial support for cancer treatment from the assistance to nationals fund, although applications for medical support are rare.</span> <span>“Very few people have requested help from the fund for cancer care, because most now have insurance,” he said </span> <span>“Unless you are destitute, an illegal resident or undocumented and living in the UAE, we cannot step in to help as the medical insurance system covers most of these cases.</span> <span>“The limit on applications to the fund is not defined, but it is offered on a case-to-case basis.”</span>